| Rama Hoetzlein on Tue, 26 Jul 2011 15:48:57 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
| Re: <nettime> some more nuanced thoughts on SWARTZ |
There is existing research on this:
Crisis in Scholarly
Publishing:http://stanford.edu/~boyd/papers/html/schol_pub_crisis.html
<http://stanford.edu/%7Eboyd/papers/html/schol_pub_crisis.html>
The Future of Publication:
http://www.mla.org/resources/documents/issues_scholarly_pub/repview_future_pub
See also (Crisis section): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Academic_publishing
Subscription rates are extremely high, and increasing, for high profile
journals - which are mostly paid by libraries. The proceeds generally do
not return to the author, they go entirely to the publisher. So the
question is: How much should go to publisher versus author?
Paid by library = Paid to author + Publisher overhead
Is the university library paying for content or for access?
Ultimately, the capitalist model is exists, but it is at the
publisher-library level. The readers, generally members of a university
with library access, usually pay nothing. The writer, also a member of
university with affiliation needed to publish, also pays and is paid
nothing for publishing. So both individual readers and writers are
pay/paid nothing - which I think is good, except that it excludes people
outside the university model.
Looking at the publisher-library level, the publishers are definitely
making it harder for libraries. Library budgets are being greatly cut,
but publishers continue to raise prices.
The end result is that fewer libraries participate in high profile
journals, which result in a more elite top-tier of researchers.
Basically, the capitalist model does exist, but is more deeply hidden.
It relates to which university you go to, how much access you have as a
researcher, and which journals you are free to publish in. This goes
back to how much you paid for your education to enter the academic system.
The end result of the publisher-library crisis is to further increase
the separation between well-educated (wealthy) or high profile
researchers and average ones. A good effect is that it keeps the less
serious, non-hardworking ones out, while a bad effect is that it
dissuades hardworking, talented, but disadvantaged individuals.
Rama Hoetzlein
On 7/26/2011 7:34 AM, Keith Sanborn wrote:
>It's actually worse than that: academic journals in my limited experience
>refuse to pay any rights for images and the writer of an article (at least
>in the USSA) using images has to submit proof that s/he has secured
>copyright permission for reproducing them, which means s/he has to pay for
>them or try to persuade the maker/owner of the image to yield rights of
>reproduction to the journal in my experience on absurd terms. Your mileage
>may vary.
>
>I wd love to know if there is any general research on the economics of
>academic journals--print or electronic.
<...>
# distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
# <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
# collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
# more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
# archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org